Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:6.3.5.5 (CPS)
1,262 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Counterimmunoelectrophoresis and gel diffusion were utilized for the detection and titration of antibodies to staphylococcal teichoic acids in various disease states caused by coagulase-positive staphylococcus in infants and children. Serum samples were obtained on admission and serially for 2 to 12 weeks during illness. Teichoic acid antibodies were found by CIE in 12 of 21 patients (57%) with invasive CPS disease with bacteremia (Group A), in two of 17 patients (12%) with CPS infection without bacteremia (Group B), in none of 27 patients with bacteremia and/or invasive infections caused by organisms other than CPS (Group C), and in none of 24 noninfected, hospitalized patients or healthy children (Group D). Gel diffusion was useful for titrating antibodies in seropositive sera. Teichoic acid serology is a useful adjunct in the diagnosis of invasive CPS infections. The presence of these antibodies by CIE and gel diffusion may help to identify patients with endothelial or metastatic infections associated with staphylococcal bacteremia.
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PMID:Teichoic acid serology in staphylococcal infections of infants and children. 10 May 88

Western blot detection of the species-specific pneumococcal product, pneumolysin (SPN), was shown to be almost as sensitive as PCR for the non-cultural detection of pneumococci in 27 Streptococcus pneumoniae culture-positive sputa from patients stated to have chest infections. Both techniques were considerably more sensitive than counter-current immuno-electrophoresis for pneumococcal capsular polysaccharide antigens (CPS-CIE) on the same specimens. Sensitivities for PCR, SPN-immunoblotting and CPS-CIE were 100%, 85% and 67%, respectively. In 11 S. pneumoniae culture-negative sputa taken from patients receiving antibiotics, but with proven recent pneumococcal infection, PCR and SPN-blot were positive in six (in two of which CPS-CIE was also positive), PCR alone was positive in one and SPN-blot alone was positive in one. In 11 S. pneumoniae culture-negative samples from patients not receiving antibiotics, all three tests were negative in eight, PCR was positive in three (in one of which CPS-CIE was also positive), but SPN-blot was negative in all 11. In 16 S. pneumoniae culture-negative samples from patients receiving antibiotics and with no known recent pneumococcal infections, one or more non-cultural test was positive in 11. Although further evaluation is required to assess the significance of pneumolysin detection in relation to carriage and infection and to devise a more suitable test format, these preliminary studies suggest that pneumolysin detection is a promising new approach to the non-cultural diagnosis of pneumococcal chest infection.
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PMID:Detection of pneumolysin in sputum. 1048 98